Tuesday
We had a light rain
earlier this morning – something that the crops needed. It has been interesting
to drive by the planted fields for the last several weeks, watching the seeded
fields sprout and start to grow. There are several large corn and sorghum fields
that were seeded at just the right time to catch the last rain, and the plants
are up in those fields over a foot for the corn, and a good spread for the
soya. The fields that were done a little later have been hanging back, but this
rain should, in my family’s expression, ‘bring them along’.
The rain pattern has
been just perfect for the strawberries. The baskets I have bought from the
stands of two different berry farms are just excellent. Hardly a spoiled or too
green berry in the bunch and they have lasted (in spite of my depredations)
very well. I hope to get a third batch before they are gone. And I am hoping
for local raspberries. That is a really short crop, and sometimes I miss it.
Speaking of stands, This is
the one where my granddaughter worked two years ago This year's is up and stocked in my shopping town. I am watching the display like a hawk every time I pass it in the hopes of raspberries. And the first green produce should be out soon. The asparagus has been splendid, but that is pretty well it so far. Miss G, when she was working there, took a short video of her stand with the berries - from her phone, I guess - and it is quite instructive. For those of you too urban to know about produce stands, most of them have a canopy, with tables that are set up each morning, and are supplied from a truck that is backed under the back of the canopy. Miss G had never driven a pickup when she applied for her job doing this and had to come out here and get a lesson from grandfather in his pickup. She described the ones she used as old and beat-up, not a small one like Grandpa’s.
It is pretty gruelling
work to run one of those stands. Miss G had to rise early, drive to the farm,
get her truck, drive to her stand, set up, serve customers until after supper
time, pack up, drive to the farm and drop the truck, and get to her home. Say
7:00 am to 8:00 pm. It was good pay though. This summer she has an indoor job,
with bilingual bonus – she is working in a federal museum. We are told that
Canada Day was insanely busy there. But on the upside, she is inside and fairly
close to home.
Thursday
My poor ED has Covid.
She picked it up at a conference in France, the first in-person event she has
been able to attend for about two years. She is not very sick, she assures us,
but she is quarantining in their spare bedroom to shield her partner and
daughter, and is trying to work in there. It is a small room. Basically, there
is a single bed, a bedside table, a very small desk and some shelves. And a
closet full of storage, well-organized because that is what my daughter does,
but jammed. She is trekking to the basement bathroom from this second- floor
room so as not to share the second-floor bathroom with her daughter. All being
well, she should get out of there on Saturday. But she may be a bit stir-crazy.
She also is amused that
a lot of the people at the conference are reporting in with Covid. The
participants were mostly unmasked and the venues were not spaced out, so I
guess this is not too surprising. My guess is that the same thing will hit our
schools and universities when they try to resume in September. Only special
populations under 69 have been eligible for a fourth vaccine in Ontario, and I
think I read that Canada is having to toss away a huge number of expired
vaccines. Our governments are not, alas, efficient. At any level.
Friday
I just watched a news
clip of Boris Johnson’s resignation speech. He was not resigned to resigning,
it appeared. ‘Nothing in his life became him like the leaving of it’, hmm? I
have had to really ration my news consumption – there is nothing it is possible
for an ordinary person to do about the Ukraine, except hope, against hope
really, that it will not escalate. Covid variants keep on and on and on. Rather
like Boris, really. The weather is wonderful right at the moment, but locally
we are still seeing the aftermath of the windstorm that, in my mind, was a
harbinger of extreme weather to come as the world heats up and no one is doing
anything useful to stop it. Banning one use plastic is not going to do much
except annoy shoppers.
I grew up in the
pre-plastic-wrap era. Hardware stores were full of bins and a clerk, a real
person, counted out your screws or nails or whatever into a paper bag.
Groceries were packed in paper bags that my mother saved for multiple uses,
among them covers for my school books. The text books were loaned from the
school board at the beginning of the year and we had to keep them as pristine
as possible to hand back at the end of the year or face paying for a new one.
Hence paper bag covers. We could write on those. And did. Meat was wrapped in
‘butcher’s paper’ a heavy paper with one side waxed. And yes, the packages
leaked.
What really blows my mind (yeah, dated slang), is that it took so little time for plastic to gum up the ocean, the soil and, probably, our lungs.
My mother took a string
bag or two to buy vegetables. Fruit came in wooden boxes or baskets. Again, we
reused those. My school lunch was packed in a paper bag and the sandwich
wrapped in waxed paper, secured with an elastic band. I folded up the bag and
paper and took it all home for reuse. Milk and pop were sold in glass bottles.
My grandmother bought in quantity and things like rolled oats came in burlap
bags.
This sort of packaging
made more work than the plastics and so when they became available, we all
started using them, gleefully and without much thought as to disposal. The
availability was just starting when I started keeping house, summer of 1963. I
used a lot of tinfoil and waxed paper then, as I recall, and kept - as I still
do - vegetables in bins. The bins were the result of a terribly stupid accident
when I forgot a bag of root vegetables in a bottom cupboard and they rotted.
We all loved the ‘ziplock’
bags, although I can’t really remember when they became available. The first I
recall were about when my daughters’ contemporaries started having babies.
There was also, at that time, a lovely contraption that had a single-use plastic
bag for the baby’s milk instead of a glass bottle. Sterilizing glass bottles was no fun at all
and I was really impressed with this labour-saving gizmo. But I honestly can’t
remember what we used to carry breastmil for my grandkid except that a container
leaked into my purse on one unfortunate occasion. Happily for both generations,
mostly both my daughter and I breastfed, reducing the need for bottles to a
minimum, often for the use of a grandparent minding the child. Once, indeed,
for a great-grandmother.
Monday, 11 July 2022
It is my YD's birthday today. And she is far away.
My house is being cleaned by my wonderful neighbour/cleaner and I am working away on the bits and pieces of my brother-in-law’s estate. Or, I will be if I ever finish this and get it posted. I talk too much, even on paper. If anyone asks you to be an executor of their estate, make sure that there is also a law firm involved or the trivia will smother you. Not that it is ‘executor’ any more. I am an ‘estate trustee’. Sigh. That, I guess, is what happens when Latin is no longer taught.
Speaking of teaching.
My high school organized and held an 100th anniversary party. After
the fact, an attendee was posting photos and spelled the name of the teams ‘Sparten’
instead of ‘Spartan’. I corrected it and, underneath my correction in the
comments, someone politely pointed out to me that the word was used to name the
school teams. My English teacher would have made mincemeat of the whole
exchange.
Not that Spellcheck and I are really in tune. I am struggling, I really am, to accept the use of a plural pronoun or possessive with a singular noun. e.g. - ‘Their name is Judy and they are two years old.’ I have to make myself do it. And have a coffee and a good cry afterward. Spellcheck does not like ‘eg’ or ‘ie’. What did I say about Latin? Coffee, a doughnut and a good cry. But while you are wiping your tears, here is what they stand for.
Well, we will see if the formatting worked this time. I am going to shut up, shut down and post this before worse occurs. And, when I typed it, I used a sans serif font and no double strikes at the start of paragraphs. Sigh. (It seems that 'sigh' is becoming my signature.)
Many people in our lives now have Covid. My husband and I have avoided it so far but I don’t hold out much hope for the future.
ReplyDeleteI still wear a mask at the store, in the theatre etc. When I do get it I don’t want to share it with others.
We had the fourth vaccine. People 60+ and immune compromised could get the fourth dose here. Also, 60+ have access to the anti-viral vaccine once infected. Our friends have taken it and the cough disappeared quickly!
Take care!
My daughter's generation, under 60, is not yet eligible for vaccine. She had a light dose of Covid, however, and so far, at least, has not passed it on.
DeleteI am wearing a mask most places. I did take it off to get my hair cut and the hair cut is a lot better than usual.
Not sure what you mean by anti viral vaccine. I will look it up.
We also purchased our last strawberries about last Tuesday or maybe Wednesday from the stand around the corner by Shoppers. The strawberries didn't quite last us through all of Wimbledon.
ReplyDeleteI really can't remember, but of course we must have just put soggy garbage in bins. It must have been awful. Now we wrap plastic inside of plastic and maybe even one more layer.
I have just been considering that if we are to use the pronoun 'they' to refer to one person, then we should probably say they is instead of they are.
When I was growing up, the 'garbage' bag under the sink was paper and it was as much as your life was worth to put anything wet into it. Scraps went into a separate bag, were wrapped and went out to the bin in the alley. Fats went into a can. By pickup day, the garbage pails might have maggots in the summer. I have had a horror of the things ever since.
DeleteAnd yes, plural pronoun. As in 'They wore their red dress to the dance.' Drives me INSANE.
I have one last box of berries but they are the white centred variety. Not as good.
I completely missed strawberry season here back in June. I used to make lovely strawberry pie with farm berries. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteThe spelling errors on television are the ones that really kill me. Chyrons, graphics, locally produced commercials...does no one know anything anymore? Or care to check? It's physically painful to me, like discovering a paper cut when using hand sanitizer.
Still, we must fight on.
I have been following a facebook page of my high school and have been horrified by the lack of spelling, grammar and, indeed, literacy, in some of the posts. One woman spelled the name of the school teams wrong. AAAArg.
DeleteRe strawberries: there is always next year. I do not buy the year-round berries with the white cores and lack of taste. So in spring I, um, pig out.
Field tomatoes are up next. Soon! And local corn is less than a month away.
I love the analogy.
The strawberry harvest is over for us and so are the sweet cherries, there are still a few sour cherries on the tree... and the fields are being harvested - a spectacle that I love :-)))
ReplyDeleteI found you at Marie S.p.s. the cornflower is not the chicory... did you find it? We have both types of blue flowers here with us... the cornflower is usually at the edge of the field and the chicory tends to be at the edge of the forest.
Many greetings to you. by Viola